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Showing posts with label Craig Foster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Craig Foster. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

Fozzie on fire on the Twitter - FSNW Coaches under the pump!

Well everyone has an opinion and there is always a debate between those who've played professionally and those Coaches who haven't.

Do you need to play professionally to develop young players? I don't think so but then I didn't train professionally - I played in Canberra!!!!

But maybe our Coaches who are full-time, but haven't played professionally have lacked real guidance from the professional side of the game down the years.

Anyway enjoyed the Fozzie outbursts below on Twitter - he's well worth a follow unlike most of the rest of the world on there - have no idea if he's right or wrong.

Craig_Foster

You've had people in charge of elite talents in NSW who wouldn't know shape of ball. Now Spider, shared pitch with Kaka & Alex, 80+ caps

Craig Foster

How valuable for young keeper to come under guidance of spider with AC Milan experience. Priceless! Milan training principles, pro mentality

Craig Foster

The deadwood coaches who've been killing the game for years at FNSW are on way out, top quality former players being brought in. Bravo!!

Read More...

Friday, 5 August 2011

Why we need Fozzie!

Each of these competitions has its own vested interest and with a limited talent pool, the same girls or boys are training and playing in the same elite competitions across all of these areas, with no co-ordination whatsoever.

Full article here

Raise an issue on a blog and you'll be criticised for simply having a thought - but someone needs to be raising these issues and in Craig Foster we have someone prepared to discuss, argue, and when necessary advocate for change.

Anyone following junior football in Australia knows we have "some issues" with player development - same kids for Rep Football, in Futsal, Outdoor for Federation and Schools.

School Representation Football has long been considered a waste of time for player development - of course not if you get selected - but those with a broader view of the game know school sport is crap.

And yet the competition for our players to train in the same squads goes on and on and on.

Good on yer Fozzie - give the players a break and raise the quality of the individual player development and focus. Would be nice rather than having players running off or in-demand for this team, this rep team, outdoor, futsal school, state and club.

No wonder players get injured or turned off!

Read More...

Friday, 18 February 2011

Fozzie: SOS. We need you in Canberra - can you help?

Peter Funnell author of all things www.nearpostlocal.blogspot.com is on to it. So I'm going to use Twitter to get to the man that matters - the Foz! Not sure this is a Capital Football thing - they are more about U12

Football People Power In The ACT - We Need it!

Sourced from the SBS World Game, Craig Foster's Blog http://theworldgame.sbs.com.au/craig-foster/blog/1040063/My-message-to-the-fans

The SBS World Game held a Football Fan Forum in Sydney. They intend to do more of these forums around Australia. We need a Football Fan Forum in ACT.

Why doesn't Capital Football organise a series of community forums. What are they scared of? We need a lot of positive engagement with the community and Clubs and the Captial Football Board.

Craig Foster reflects on the first Football Fan Forum. Everything he says is absoutely correct. We should take the same approach in the ACT region and we can start with the game here in the ACT redion and work up through the A league and W League to the Socceroos and Matildas.

We have no one to blame but oursleves if we don't have the Football (and Futsal) environement we want for our chidlren and our talented young players.




My message to the fans


The start of a new fan movement?

I certainly hope so, having spent last night talking football with a considerable group of football lovers in Sydney alongside various dignitaries such as Mark Bosnich and Sydney FC’s Edwin Lugt.
What a valuable and heartening experience it was.

Among the crowd a group of supporters whose football involvement stretched from running clubs, such as Mark Ambour of Waverley Old Boys, the head of the Eastern Suburbs Associoation Peter Hennessy, the boys from The Football Sack - a staple of the football twittersphere, former Deputy Mayor of Woollahra Marcus Ehrlich, the Chairman of the National Indigenous Chamber of Commerce Warren Mundine to the many Sydney FC fans who eagerly took the opportunity to question Edwin directly and plead their case for more involvement and engagement.

It’s far too rare in football for everyone to come together, well, at least from the fans' perspective.

Football Federation Australia meets with the clubs and media. Players meet with the fans at various times. But the fans rarely have the chance to meet with those responsible for managing the game they love so much.

It is a phenomenon that is quite common abroad. In England, during my time at Crystal Palace, the Chairman and club owner and team manager would meet with the fans several times a season to talk directly.
This process was seen as necessary in the running of the club, within a football culture that recognizes the invaluable connection between the club and those who support it and keep it alive.

As any fan will tell you, the chance to speak directly and praise or voice frustrations brings them closer to the club and makes them feel an important part of the game.
Issues discussed last night ranged from the ticket prices at Sydney FC to the stadium suitability, player recruitment, the brand of the club and the confusion over what Sydney stands for over the past six years, marquee players and the value of Dwight Yorke in season one, and how Sydney can connect with the fans more regularly.

Much of the two hours were spent on the need for greater football understanding at head office and the necessity to engage our own football family who can ensure the survival and prosperity of the A-League. If the game will only reach out and make them a part of the journey.

The AFC Asian Cup was raised, and the question asked about what it can do for the game.
I congratulated FFA for its achievement in gaining the hosting rights for the 2015 edition of the tournament.
It is a fantastic achievement and a diplomatic success to be endorsed as the only bidder. I explained that the 2015 AFC Asian Cup offers Australia massive benefits in three areas: tourism, business and diplomacy.

:: Tourism because nothing else Australia can undertake can bring a billion Asian eyeballs to bear on the gifts our country has to offer, not even Oprah;
:: Business because Austrade’s Business Club Australia is skilled in using these tournaments to connect business leaders from the fifteen countries with our own at events built around the games;
:: Diplomatic because the opportunity for the Australian State and Federal Governments to engage with their brethren from many of our major Asian trading partners and political partners is extraordinary.
All of this serves simply to position football as the one game that can deliver such immense benefits for our relationship regionally.

FFA can leverage this position to continue football’s rise in both prominence and influence nationally.
There was a broad range of topics discussed and I was pleased to gain an insight into the frustrations and joys of being an Australian football fan, but in the end, after thanking all for showing their passion by coming along, I left the fans with the following challenge:

Get organized!

This must be the start of a new fan movement that sees all the disparate groups come together under an umbrella organization to focus the huge numbers who love the game into a single force.

I have said many times that if football ever gets organized as a single entity we are exceptionally powerful as the largest sporting constituency in the country, a power that can be wielded at all levels of commerce and government to ensure a greater share of resources the game needs by virtue of our size.

Well, now is the time.
Football is about emotion and the fans must separate their passion into the different areas: their club, the Socceroos and the game itself.

Parochialism reigns when it comes to one’s club, as it should. But when the national game and the national team are concerned, we all have a shared agenda, a combined mission to push the interests of the game, which takes collaboration.

So following from the success of the fans forum, I urge all the fan groups around the country to begin the process of getting together to create a single voice.

When this happens, Australian football will hit light speed in it's development. such as Mark Ambour of Waverley Old Boys, the head of the Eastern Suburbs Associoation Peter Hennessy, the boys from The Football Sack - a staple of the football twittersphere, former Deputy Mayor of Woollahra Marcus Ehrlich, the Chairman of the National Indigenous Chamber of Commerce Warren Mundine to the many Sydney FC fans who eagerly took the opportunity to question Edwin directly and plead their case for more involvement and engagement.

It’s far too rare in football for everyone to come together, well, at least from the fans' perspective.

Football Federation Australia meets with the clubs and media. Players meet with the fans at various times. But the fans rarely have the chance to meet with those responsible for managing the game they love so much.

It is a phenomenon that is quite common abroad. In England, during my time at Crystal Palace, the Chairman and club owner and team manager would meet with the fans several times a season to talk directly.
This process was seen as necessary in the running of the club, within a football culture that recognizes the invaluable connection between the club and those who support it and keep it alive.

As any fan will tell you, the chance to speak directly and praise or voice frustrations brings them closer to the club and makes them feel an important part of the game.

Issues discussed last night ranged from the ticket prices at Sydney FC to the stadium suitability, player recruitment, the brand of the club and the confusion over what Sydney stands for over the past six years, marquee players and the value of Dwight Yorke in season one, and how Sydney can connect with the fans more regularly.

Much of the two hours were spent on the need for greater football understanding at head office and the necessity to engage our own football family who can ensure the survival and prosperity of the A-League. If the game will only reach out and make them a part of the journey.

The AFC Asian Cup was raised, and the question asked about what it can do for the game.
I congratulated FFA for its achievement in gaining the hosting rights for the 2015 edition of the tournament.
It is a fantastic achievement and a diplomatic success to be endorsed as the only bidder. I explained that the 2015 AFC Asian Cup offers Australia massive benefits in three areas: tourism, business and diplomacy.

:: Tourism because nothing else Australia can undertake can bring a billion Asian eyeballs to bear on the gifts our country has to offer, not even Oprah;
:: Business because Austrade’s Business Club Australia is skilled in using these tournaments to connect business leaders from the fifteen countries with our own at events built around the games;
:: Diplomatic because the opportunity for the Australian State and Federal Governments to engage with their brethren from many of our major Asian trading partners and political partners is extraordinary.
All of this serves simply to position football as the one game that can deliver such immense benefits for our relationship regionally.

FFA can leverage this position to continue football’s rise in both prominence and influence nationally.
There was a broad range of topics discussed and I was pleased to gain an insight into the frustrations and joys of being an Australian football fan, but in the end, after thanking all for showing their passion by coming along, I left the fans with the following challenge:

Get organized!

This must be the start of a new fan movement that sees all the disparate groups come together under an umbrella organization to focus the huge numbers who love the game into a single force.
I have said many times that if football ever gets organized as a single entity we are exceptionally powerful as the largest sporting constituency in the country, a power that can be wielded at all levels of commerce and government to ensure a greater share of resources the game needs by virtue of our size.
Well, now is the time.
Football is about emotion and the fans must separate their passion into the different areas: their club, the Socceroos and the game itself.

Parochialism reigns when it comes to one’s club, as it should. But when the national game and the national team are concerned, we all have a shared agenda, a combined mission to push the interests of the game, which takes collaboration.
So following from the success of the fans forum, I urge all the fan groups around the country to begin the process of getting together to create a single voice.
When this happens, Australian football will hit light speed in it's development.

Read More...

Saturday, 27 November 2010

Follow our man in Brazil

http://twitter.com/#!/Craig_Foster

Craig Foster is in Brazil - his tweets are fascinating. Interested in football beyond your own game - check out Fozzie's Twitteroos.

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Friday, 7 May 2010

Fozz has em up in ARMS!

Over at THE ROAR the natives are restless with Sir Fozzie for taking Aussies to task on the codes of football which are actually handball codes, and of course people are...well up in arms!

Here's what I Foz is actually saying:

Linking an Australian sport best suited to support the aspirations and growth of Australian economic nation is a question smart Aussies should consider. Why?

Because we should surely invest most money in codes that enable girls and boys to remain healthy for life, codes that best assist our nation's culturaland economic aspirations.

Fozz reckons football best represents Australia economic/cultural and sporting growth of all the codes. You might not like the man but the ideas are worthy of consideration and on many levels it's more economic, has better benefits for boys and girls and the future of the country to promote and encourage/ support football development rather than...

say AFL to China, or Rugby League across the globe or indeed these codes to girls.

Are the boys and girls of Australia really going to benefit from encouraging them to play League or AFL. Is it going to keep them fit for life is just one questions I might pose.

Maybe some people in Australia miss one major point of the book! But then hands up who's read it!

And Fozzies handball point remains and indeed is critical to get Australians to bring to their football, grassroots, supporting of their kids, support of national teams etc...call the games what you like if it keep your blood pressure down...but Foz is pointing out that the other three codes are played with their hands....or haven't you noticed. And there's a fair bit more to it than that point.

He uses the argument debate to further point out the difference between the three other footy codes and football. A crucial difference.

Without Aussies understanding this difference we bring our attitudes from the other codes, and let's face it more Aussies watch AFL and League more often than football so it's natural some attitudes from those codes flow into football. Foz argues they are useless attitudes when applied to football. As a small skilful player, I agree!

Get in to him, tackle him, crunch him, be a man (whatever that means) are great AFL/League attributes and make the game better....and a team succeed but try and apply that to the Brazilian or Dutch football team and this is where the Aussies need to aim to succeed in football.

Those "Aussie" attitudes can never assist Australian footballers succeed on the international stage, can they?

All Aussies can fight on the field, we've all had our weekly fill of AFL and League values flowing through our TV's, school yard and workplaces. These attitudes from the other codes and supporters cannot help Australia EVER succeed in footballl.

To the base of supporters who follow many codes these so-called Aussie attitudes have to be revisited if football is to progress. That I reckon is what Fozzie is really saying in my view.

And you can still call it football if you think it's football!

Read More...

Tuesday, 4 May 2010

Fozzie praises the Bloggers (he meant me you know it)

It's all there in black and white, Craig Foster praises Australia's football bloggers as having more knowledge and insight than the profesional football print journalists...it's all there in his new book Fozz on Football..so get out and read all about Aussie Fozzie football....

Okay he didn't include me, but he must have meant Mike Salter and Tony Tannous, and I'm a friend of Mike AND Tony so by default he meant me...after all who is the other blogger...... and he might have meant me, and he didn't mention those "other" journo's personally...but I know who he meant!

Read More...

Nearpost dedicates to the Fozz

A-League, Socceroos, Sydney FC..they love them on the Nearpost even when they aren't playing, Perth Glory, Asian Champions League, FFA, Asia Cup, India, World Cup Memories we've got it all.

Lucy Zelic, Paddy Bordier and Terry Henry take you through all the Australian football news and views, quiz and this weeks dedication to Craig Foster because he wrote a book.

Download.
or play right from your computer....










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Monday, 30 November 2009

Do you know more than Miron Bleiberg.

Stephen Lustica was plunged into centre midfield for Gold Coast United on Saturday against Melbourne Victory.

Stephen is 18 and playing his first start in the A-League. Away to Melbourne at the Dome.

Gold Coast lost the midfield and lost the game 4-0.

No-one could blame a young aspiring player, but one could wonder at the logic of Miron Bleiberg and former Lazio midfielder and Assistant Coach Paul Okon.

Gold Coast's depth was stretched, away to Melbourne so why play the best midfielder in the league, a proven International at World Cup level, out on the right wing.

Particularly when the Gold Coast were unable to get the ball to Jason Culina and indeed after the first goal is was quickly apparent that it would be Melbourne down the middle, Melbourne down the left and Melbourne down the right. It was.

Which makes you wonder when little old football observers like me can pick HUGE defects in Miron (One season wonder) Bleiberg...and Vitaslez (I'd like to water plants) Lavicka tactical genius what exactly do these guys bring to the table?

Laurie McKinna even had a chat with Fozzie on SBS yesterday...what is the World coming to? Anyone laugh when Fozzie asked Lozza, oh so gently, about the style of play from Season 1 to now?

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Thursday, 13 August 2009

Why Fozzie doesn't get football.

When the beautiful Arsenal with Ces Fabregas running the Wenger show come to Scott McDonald's Celtic Park next week, Fozzie will want to see the style, the flowing football and the result to match. ie Arsenal must win.

The 60,000 Celtic fans who will be watching their team assembled at around the price of a Theo Walcott will want to see Celtic win. Simple game innit.

Fozzie if you don't understand that, you don't understand football!

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Wednesday, 3 June 2009

Celtic to pack out Suncorp

Over 26,000 tickets have been sold for the Brisbane Roar Celtic friendly in July.

No surprise really, people just want to see quality..eh Fozzie.

(And I'm a Celtic fan of some mileage in case you are new to the blog)

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Saturday, 18 October 2008

Fozzie not happy with Joeys Coach

Jan Versliejan the Young Socceroos Coach will move to Coach the Australian Under 17 side after the completes his duties with the Under 19's in Saudi Arabia this year.....and the current Under 17 Coach South Australian Martyn Crook will presumabl get the flick.


Makes sense as the intake for the AIS is falling this year and most of the Young Socceroos are off to A-League clubs. Will they get as good a development opportunity as if they had two years at the AIS like Viduka and co, definitely not.

That said the AIS has now recognised the need to change their focus, produce better players at a younger age and this is a good thing...and much needed.

At 17 a player is not ready for the A-League and will need to feel the Youth League set up they enter is valuable. I doubt there is the infrastructure in A-League Club structures yet to be confident that the players development will continue.

Australia has a long history of developing players late. Wayne Rooney and Lionel Messi may jump on to the scene as 17 or 18 year olds. But Lucas Neill and Tim Cahill are just two Aussies who has to wait a long time to get to Premier League football.

Fozzie slates the Under 17 Coach Martyn Crook saying he clearly isn't the best we have. His side didn't qualify for the Under 17 World Cup.

They lost in injury time, but if the benchmark is qualification, and it is, then Crook's position should be at least reviewed or ended.

That said Versleijen's appointment to the AIS and Under 17 Coach would appear to solve that problem in the immediate future.

But who coaches the Under 20's from here on in?

And this is the last Under 20 team that will have real time together, and this squad has already been eroded as Club v Country/AIS battle takes place.

James Holland, Jason Hoffman and Seb Ryall are just two who have long left the Under 20 nursery at the AIS as Clubs recognised their qualities. They were ready for top-grade football. So moulding the Under 20 sqiad will be much harder from here on in.

For any Coach.

So what next?

Fozzie wants "political appointments" of NTC's wiped clean and our technical director to control and influence these appointments.

Well we don't have a Technical Director, Rob Baan is off, and changing NTC appointments or at least reviewing them to ensure we have the best Coaches of our young kids.......

Well good luck with that one:)

But time for a review is well due.

Many have held positions from the days of old soccer. Not necessarily a bad thing, but clearly with the changes in the game, the new focus, a ruthless reappraisal should be undertaken by the new Technical Director.

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Thursday, 25 September 2008

Kids football should be free.

Craig Foster from SBS has written an explosive piece on football registration fees, coaching costs, coaching development etc.

Here's just one issue he picks out.

The best known example is the Coerver system, a private training franchise, which Football NSW formerly ran in what was a fundamental conflict of interest and led to a neglect of the junior clubs and Associations who were, in essence, in competition with their own State body for the training of young players.

What incentive was there for NSW to work diligently to improve the standard of coaching and the systems of youth development in the junior clubs, when they were selling training sessions to fill the gap for parents who could, or at least felt it necessary to, afford the extra training?

Coerver delivered millions of dollars of revenue for NSW and the excessive charging for the ‘training’ of young players still persists. The name may have changed and the license fee avoided, but the culture of greed still exists, and Lord help any parent whose child is persuaded to attend numerous camps, programs and costly overseas tours all in the name of ‘development’, with some parents forking out anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 per year.


Read Fozzie's full script below and he invites email responses.twg@sbs.com.au

There is no doubt he will have huge support from across the country on this one. Anyone who listens to parents at their local clubs will realise he's on a winner.

So let the debate begin.
Full Fozzie post below.


Five years after the Crawford report, football has made wonderful strides forward, yet the next area of the game that require attention are (some of) the State administrative bodies.

Particularly, in my experience, Football NSW and Northern NSW.

Much of my time is spent in a volunteer capacity with Clubs and Associations around the country, a wonderful opportunity to put something back into the game at entry level and spend time with hundreds of passionate and committed volunteers, the very lifeblood of football, but also a valuable chance to gauge the mood at grass roots and hear the frustrations they face.

And throughout NSW the message is always the same, that cultural change is yet to occur at State level.

Countless times I hear about the endemic lack of support to Associations and the hundreds of thousands of dollars paid in levies with little in return, and it is clear that in many instances, the old political problems still exist.

This is partly because the ‘old guard’ of administrators, who led the game into its darkest period, continue to infest the management and boards of these bodies.

Certainly in the case of Northern NSW, outside of the Newcastle area they are a constant source of angst and a detriment to the game in the country and Northern areas, regions the FFA’s National Development Review specifically targeted to provide a rich vein of playing talent in future.

An inquiry into the management of NNSW would be a very valuable exercise, with every Association and Zone uniting to determine whether the service they receive from the State body is anywhere near adequate for the considerable levies they pay.

This is the next positive progression for football, now that the veneer has been reshaped with the National teams and the professional domestic competition, time to turn an intense spotlight on the real heart of the game, the grass roots, where hundreds of thousands of players and spectators, volunteers and administrators have their daily and weekly football experience, time for the game itself to demand better management at State level.

The same applies to Football NSW where the culture is, in my view, poisoned and in need of complete overhaul, because this organization has a history of putting profit before the development of the game.

The best known example is the Coerver system, a private training franchise, which Football NSW formerly ran in what was a fundamental conflict of interest and led to a neglect of the junior clubs and Associations who were, in essence, in competition with their own State body for the training of young players.

What incentive was there for NSW to work diligently to improve the standard of coaching and the systems of youth development in the junior clubs, when they were selling training sessions to fill the gap for parents who could, or at least felt it necessary to, afford the extra training?

Coerver delivered millions of dollars of revenue for NSW and the excessive charging for the ‘training’ of young players still persists. The name may have changed and the license fee avoided, but the culture of greed still exists, and Lord help any parent whose child is persuaded to attend numerous camps, programs and costly overseas tours all in the name of ‘development’, with some parents forking out anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 per year.

I hesitate to say the ‘education’ of youngsters, because sadly Football NSW fail to understand that a football development coach is far more than a drills and skills practitioner, and have promoted former Coerver coaches throughout the elite development system.

Coerver has its place, and can be one element of a broader football education just like the many other skills based systems available, but for Football NSW to profit from a service they should have been giving to clubs and Associations to build the game was, in my view, abominable.

The proper role of Football NSW is to ensure the level of information, management and coaching is of such quality in our junior clubs that parents don’t have to pay for extra coaching, in a game that is already costly in relation to other codes, rather than competing directly with their paying clubs and profiting from the vacuum they created.

This culture of greed is anti-football because the focus is on youngsters whose parents can afford to pay, not on the best players as a matter of principle.

Now Football NSW have launched a site which fits perfectly within their culture of profit before the game, selling simple coaching sessions to parents around the State who are in the dark about how to conduct and plan the season’s training of a young team, and now are made to pay for the information.

So, in a fight with three other football codes who spend tens of millions of dollars on free education, equipment and resources to attract young talent and support their game, Football NSW continues to hoard their millions and charge the maximum for the most basic support resources for the football community.

The sole shareholder and managing director of the company behind the site is a Football NSW employee, in partnership with the State body, and thus is remunerated by the parent’s levies to support the growth and improvement of the game, then charging them for basic information.

Now, why are these parents and coaches in need of assistance?

Because Football NSW have done nothing to help them, yet now they seek to profit from their own incompetence.

So once again, instead of seeing a problem to be solved for the good of the game, Football NSW sense an opportunity from which to profit.

In my view, this is abhorrent, and naturally anyone who wants to personally profit from the game is entitled do so, but not while being in a position where one of their basic tasks is to improve the quality of players and coaches, in tandem with the coaching and development section of the organization, and every parent and Association in the State should right now ask why they do not receive this basic coaching information for free, when they have already paid for it in their levies?

State bodies have a responsibility to deliver every possible program and education resource at the lowest possible cost in order to support the game and their paying customers the Associations, clubs and parents, and their stance should be that the cheaper and more accessible coaching information is at club level, the better our youngsters will be coached, the greater our future prospects, the stronger the game.

Football NSW evidently takes the view that the less people know, the better the opportunity to profit, and it’s fine to do so from the very customers who partly fund the organization through registration levies.

The FFA would do well to initiate a very close inspection of the conduct of two bodies who are poisoning our game at many levels, and grass roots Associations should immediately organise themselves to collectively question whether they are receiving the service the game requires, and deserves.

It is time to question ant conflicts of interest and all commercial agreements and whether they are appropriate, and for the grass roots, the heart and soul of football, to rise up and demand game-centred management, not greed before the game.

Many grass roots administrators tell me they feel powerless and that any attempts to question NNSW or Football NSW leads to victimisation, but this culture of fear must end, and it is through the solidarity of genuine lovers of the beautiful game that the grass roots can effect positive change.

And be very certain of this, any ethical State body will welcome their Association constituents getting together, sharing knowledge and resources, asking probing questions, and demanding outstanding service in the interests of the sport.

Those who don’t support this are the final blight to be removed from the game.

If you don't have enough character space here when replying, please feel free to send me a note at twg@sbs.com.au about your experiences with these organizations.

http://theworldgame.sbs.com.au/blogs/craigfoster/greed-poisons-the-game-138801/

Read More...

Sunday, 22 June 2008

Has Craig Foster gone soft!

Come back Craig we loved you as a critic:)

SBS Commentator Craig Foster has written a piece in the SMH, see full article below, on the Dutchification of Aussie football.

In general it's fine but there are a few glaring mis-placed passes.

While the Socceroos' performances against Iraq raise concerns about their ability against stronger opposition, Verbeek has answered every question put to him, and his management of the logistical challenges of Asia has been perfect.


Oh yeah Fozzie, Pim answered every questions put to him. Really? China away, Iraq at home, Iraq away. Very convincing answers...I think not. He got the results, but as you ALWAYS say it's about style not results, and these performancs had no style.

The Dutch blueprint is a dominant, tactically flexible, attacking style of football. For now, it suits us perfectly.


Tactically, flexible and attacking.

Well against China, the poorest international side playing at home in years, our Dutch master had no tactical flexibility against China. And excuse me, but where was the attacking flexible style away to Iraq.

And the new Dutch guy at the AIS might be fantastic, but Fozzie, have you ever heard of him? Or is it good enough just to take any old Dutch guy these days. And I mean old!

Come on Fozzie we're delighted we're through, we're happy to see improved methodology and coaching strategies from the FFA. But cart blanche approval of Verbeek and some unknown Dutch coach, surely we want a more critical football culture than that!

And the Dutch lost overnight..to Hiddink admittedly, is it time to employ Turks?


Fozzie writes:

It was a stellar week for Australia. Events in the Middle East and at Euro 2008 in the last seven days have reinforced the wisdom of applying the Dutch model to the development of the game here.

In Austria and Switzerland, the quality and verve of the Netherlands under Marco van Basten has been matched only by the speed and precision of Guus Hiddink's young Russians. In Qatar, the Socceroos progressed to the next stage of World Cup qualifying under the tutelage of Pim Verbeek.

If you add Zenit St Petersburg's recent UEFA Cup win under "dirty Dick" Advocaat, you have three examples - from very different footballing cultures - of teams being well managed by Dutch coaches.

While the Socceroos' performances against Iraq raise concerns about their ability against stronger opposition, Verbeek has answered every question put to him, and his management of the logistical challenges of Asia has been perfect.

The trick is to now leverage this progress into future development, and here it can get tricky. The natives will get restless if the trickle of Dutch coaches making their way to Oz turns into a flood. Just last week Jan Versleijen was flagged as the likely head coach of the Australian Institute of Sport's football program. But I hope the gates are opened even further.

The next step is to replace Rob Baan as national technical director when his contract expires at the end of the year. We must import a highly qualified Dutch technician with an even stronger CV in youth development. His job will be to expedite change at junior and elite levels, and to tie up a deal with the Royal Netherlands Football Association (KNVB) to import their coaching licence system - clearly among the world's finest.

But for all the progress at national level, the states' football appointments are as political as ever. So I say quicken the pace of Dutch imports - temporarily. During a five-year window, we must absorb as much knowledge as we can from these coaches. For every Dutch appointment, there must be national - not state - appointments of at least one, preferably two, Australian assistants. Then we adapt and improve.

There is a feeling that we have replaced a British footballing "mafia" with a Dutch one. But unlike the British influence, which set us back decades, the Dutch infiltration is strategic, short-term and based on specific gaps in our football education.

We need a clear direction for a limited period of time. After that, we can adapt those Dutch methods to our own circumstances and culture, and create an attractive, attacking - and winning - Australian style of football.It was a stellar week for Australia. Events in the Middle East and at Euro 2008 in the last seven days have reinforced the wisdom of applying the Dutch model to the development of the game here.

In Austria and Switzerland, the quality and verve of the Netherlands under Marco van Basten has been matched only by the speed and precision of Guus Hiddink's young Russians. In Qatar, the Socceroos progressed to the next stage of World Cup qualifying under the tutelage of Pim Verbeek.

If you add Zenit St Petersburg's recent UEFA Cup win under "dirty Dick" Advocaat, you have three examples - from very different footballing cultures - of teams being well managed by Dutch coaches.

While the Socceroos' performances against Iraq raise concerns about their ability against stronger opposition, Verbeek has answered every question put to him, and his management of the logistical challenges of Asia has been perfect.

The trick is to now leverage this progress into future development, and here it can get tricky. The natives will get restless if the trickle of Dutch coaches making their way to Oz turns into a flood. Just last week Jan Versleijen was flagged as the likely head coach of the Australian Institute of Sport's football program. But I hope the gates are opened even further.

The next step is to replace Rob Baan as national technical director when his contract expires at the end of the year. We must import a highly qualified Dutch technician with an even stronger CV in youth development. His job will be to expedite change at junior and elite levels, and to tie up a deal with the Royal Netherlands Football Association (KNVB) to import their coaching licence system - clearly among the world's finest.

But for all the progress at national level, the states' football appointments are as political as ever. So I say quicken the pace of Dutch imports - temporarily. During a five-year window, we must absorb as much knowledge as we can from these coaches. For every Dutch appointment, there must be national - not state - appointments of at least one, preferably two, Australian assistants. Then we adapt and improve.

There is a feeling that we have replaced a British footballing "mafia" with a Dutch one. But unlike the British influence, which set us back decades, the Dutch infiltration is strategic, short-term and based on specific gaps in our football education.

We need a clear direction for a limited period of time. After that, we can adapt those Dutch methods to our own circumstances and culture, and create an attractive, attacking - and winning - Australian style of football.

To understand how crucial the uniformity of approach is, witness Qatar's ill-fated approach to their development program. Qatar appointed a French coach in every academy at the under-13s level, a Dutchman at the under-15s level and an Italian at the under-17s. But they discovered that each coach preached a method suited to his individual culture. Of course, they failed to divine a cohesive method from the chaos.

The Dutch blueprint is a dominant, tactically flexible, attacking style of football. For now, it suits us perfectly.



The Dutch blueprint is a dominant, tactically flexible, attacking style of football. For now, it suits us perfectly.

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Sunday, 18 May 2008

Was this you at the kids football this weekend?

"Get rid of it", "kick it out", "don't do that", "tackle him" and "pass it"

Craig Foster says, "all of these messages restrictive, telling a youngster what not to do and often telling them to take the most basic and, in fact, incorrect option."


Craig Foster highlights how Parents/Coaches can hinder our children's development on the football field. As a teacher of 17 years I could not agree more.

So Kurangai football club in Sydney had a day where no-one bar players and refs were allowed to talk, shout etc. If you did dosh was donated to charity.

Fantastic idea.

Here's a part of Craig's article. Certainly food for thought.

"Get rid of it", "kick it out", "don't do that", "tackle him" and "pass it" are the usual fare we can hear on any suburban pitch every Saturday, all of these messages restrictive, telling a youngster what not to do and often telling them to take the most basic and, in fact, incorrect option.

Many of these messages are actually setting the youngster up for failure in adult football, since to play at elite level requires the ability to deal with risk, to make and deal with mistakes, and to be able to play comfortably on the ball in all situations.

The truth is that our kids would be far better off if they could play by themselves with parental supervision, not involvement, and would more quickly find their way within the game on what does and does not work.


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Thursday, 1 May 2008

Simon Hill 3 Fozzie 1

So we all know the best team in Europe, Barcelona, are out.

Why because Fozzie has been telling anyone who is listening that the best football team is never English. Even if they have a load of foreigners in their side.

"Manchester United could never outplay Barcelona," said Fozzie this morning.

But Dear Fozzie,

You have it wrong.

Football is a business and it is about winning. It's also about passion
Football is also about fans, and every fan at every club wants to win a semi-final, no matter how they play. Believe me!

Without fans, there would be no passion, no TV, and no Fozzie!

The Spanish, the Dutch, Scots, Argentineans and especially the English fans all want to win. Sure they want to play the beautiful game, but they also understand what Fozzie never does.

It's not always possible to play the beautiful game.

And who is to say one way of playing is better or more beautiful. Well clearly Fozzie, but Fozzie isn't coaching, isn't restricted by players, budgets, or the short-term goals of Club Owners and the people who demand success, the fans.

Fozzie can preach to us all. Almost zealot like, demanding that we love Barca or AC Milan and the way they play.

Simon Hill called it tonight, and if I didn't know better, I'd have thoughthe was sending a message to Fozzie and his old mates at SBS.

"The game is about winning," said Simon or words to that effect...and United won.

Can Fozzie enjoy an all English final or will viewers have to listen to hours of complaining about the style of play, and how Barca aren't there.

Goals win games Foz and your teams are out.

And btw Foz it's entertainment, so lighten up and enjoy the game.

It's a final. It may well be dull, but please highlight the joy of the game no matter how limited.

It will be 5am in the morning and waking up to hear you tell me how dull these sides are at half-time. Frankly Fozzie I'm over it, and so are me mates!

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Sunday, 27 April 2008

The cost of playing football.


Good job Fozzie. SBS Commentator Craig Foster has hit at the heart of many, many people's thoughts in his recent article. Craig Foster discusses registrations fees, State and Club coffers and FFA's "our hands our tied," response.

Indeed I'm forever having to defend the cost to friends of football registration compared to other codes. Like it's my fault:)

Fozzie raises some interesting questions, and more importantly stokes a solution.
The idea, mentioned in the article, that Aussie football blog world brings together many many fans and intellects is certainly correct.

Indeed I think the internet, or t'internet, as they say in Yorkshire, has saved football in this country.

T'internet has given many many fans a chance to keep up with the news of Australian football, when let's face it without it, and PayTV, who would know anything about the A-League, the Off-season or any other Aussie football chat.

So Fozzies idea to draw on this resource is a strong one. One that must surely have come from frustration with the FFA's inability to tackle the issues concerned.

It also comes from someone who is involved at grassroots level. If you're not you're probably not aware of the fees, compared to other codes, and probably not concerned what the mums and dads of interest-raising Australia are thinking.

Fozzie also raises the amount of money being poured into academies by parents. Some great, some not so skilled, but many privately run and the money goes where exactly?

All State and Territory Federations have a massive resource. Thousands and thousands of children and adults spending money on football, not just registration fees, but adcademy costs, kits, balls, boot and travel. Football has huge resources.

Are those registered getting value for money?

Is football getting value for money?

Perhaps the business community can be harnessed to increase our benefits, decrease our costs and levies. Our customer base is....huge and increasingly powerful and talented across Australia.

The questions, structure of the money, and opportunities need to be asked.
So Economists or Students with time who want to write the report for football, hey that sounds like me, contact the Foz and he may well send you on a numbers crunch to end all number crunches.

This is no easy task, and would I think require more than one bod, but it needs to be done.

Truth is football is such a huge business in Australia this report needs to be financed for "the good of the game."

Go on do it for football!

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Tuesday, 8 April 2008

Fozzie: How not to do a Carney

Fans and Youth Coaches would have groaned, thumped the TV, or just watched in stunned silence as Socceroo David Carney missed that chance in the dying minutes of the recent game against China.



In his recent article on the World Game website Craig Foster gives a specific piece of advice for kids and coaches. Worth a thought.

Fozzie tells us how he did it and how you can show your kids not to do a Carney

Of course we could have won the game had Carney finished another beautiful ball from Bresc, and for any youth coaches out there watching the game, ensure your kids take the ball with the leading foot, being the left in this case, and strike with the path of the ball into the far corner, not open up the body to play with the back foot as Carney did. This takes more time and opens up the ball for the defender to make a challenge, and is also more difficult as the back foot has to change the path of the ball.

Being left footed, normally David would strike through the ball to help it on its way, but no doubt fatigue played a part late in the game.

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Wednesday, 12 March 2008

Forget Beckham, it's Celtic for Melbourne

SBS are reporting that Melbourne Victory are aiming to play Beckham in a glamour game in Melbourne later this year.

But BETTER than that they are trying to fix a game with Celtic for July.

Take that Craig Foster:)

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Wednesday, 20 February 2008

Craig Foster: "I like to see the best football team win all the time."


SBS Football Analyst and Former Socceroo Craig Foster was a guest on the Nearpost this week. Fozzie, as he’s known to many, gave us his views of a range of topics.

On the A-League Grand Final between Central Coast Mariners and Newcastle Jets.

“I’m hoping for a good game of football, crowds are up, exceptional atmospheres, and
I hope we get another record crowd at the SFS (Sydney Football Stadium). From the FFA point of view it vindicates their decision to hold the Grand Final in Sydney I think it is the right one.
On the teams:

“(Sasho) Petrovski and (John) Aloisi will be key for the Mariners; Mile Jedinak has been good in midfield. Most of the rest are role players, good players but hard workers. The team is based on a hard working team rather than any real class football in my view.”

On the best A-League style:

“The Jets and the (Queensland) Roar have been the best football teams, by some measure. It’s good for the game that one of the best passing teams is in the Grand Final. I wouldn’t have liked the Mariners v Sydney FC or Glory final. I like to see the best football team win all the time. It’s a lesson Australian football need to learn.

On SBS coverage of A-League:

“SBS has promoted the game for thirty years. The game has now taken hold. We need to discuss the game, where it’s at and where it’s going. I don’t believe that is damaging to the game, in fact I believe the opposite. I believe strongly in debate. Good football cultures discuss the game.”

Is A-League football style limited by the Salary Cap?

“No, that’s ridiculous. If the Roar played good football for most of the last three years were they restricted by a Salary Cap?

They’ve all got the same money the same number of players. Why can Victory play football but others can’t? The Jets played good football, Glory were rubbish. It’s about buying players to play the style of football you want to play.

Lawrie McKinna has his team play a style of football he wants. He god rid of Noel Spencer presumably because he didn’t fit the style.

Look at John Kosmina for instance. He had (Steve) Corica and Juninho available to play together. He said Juninho can’t play with Corica, he doesn’t have a defensive bone in his body. That is a philosophy of a Coach.

Scottish fans say you can’t play good attacking football you’ll get beat. That’s why they don’t qualify for tournaments. The best nations actually do it. If you play a certain style of football, you’ll produce a certain type of footballer. This is the discussion Australia needs to have.

Frank Farina v Gus Hiddink:

“The Socceroos under Frank Farina, Frank was saying and he was still a young Coach at the Confederations Cup, he was saying this is the best we can do, these players are only as good as what they are doing now.

“He basically believed we couldn’t play any better than that, if we played attacking football we’d get destroyed. Hiddink came in and what was the change in three months with the same players? Why? Because the Dutch philosophy their vision of the game says we are going to keep the ball. As soon as you launch it down the other end you don’t play, that’s what Coaches in the A-League should be doing in my view.”

And finally; Why are you reading the Sports news on SBS World News?

“It’s something different, a challenge. I’m quite enjoying it. You might have noticed there’s a bit more football coverage, by the end it will be all football.

I saw it as an opportunity for football to be pushed in a Free-To-Air channel.”

You can hear the full Craig Foster interview on this weeks Nearpost podcast available at www.nearpost.blogspot.com


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Nearpost Radio Show

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Part One:

How successful is the A-League.
Mr Anti-Football Peter FitzSimons Fomer Wallaby and SMH Columnist thinks football is probably here to stay. Peter talks about how he was booed in Germany when he was on the bandwagon, I got to boo him on air too. Loved it:)
Matildas Star Lisa De Vanna
A-League Grand Final

Part Two
Craig Foster talks football tactics, Coaches and his vision for the future. He also gives me a fair going over on my thoughts/views on football. Mind you it wasn't just me. Kossie, The Mariners, Scottish fans, and Coaches also copped a bit of flack. Can't disagree with Craig's passion or vision for the game. He wants us to win the World Cup.
Arif Hossein and Michella Bertrand discuss Fozzie's comments
Geordie John from Belnorth is going for the Jets in The Grand Final
Capital Football news

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